Mon DECEMBER 10, 2018 / 5:31 pm
Wall St. ends choppy day higher; tech
helps, Brexit weighs
DJ: 24,423.26 +34.31 NAS: 7,020.52 +51.27 S&P: 2,637.72
+4.64 12/10
(Reuters) - Wall Street
ended Monday’s volatile session slightly higher with help from technology
stocks although bank stocks tumbled and uncertainty over Britain’s exit from
the European Union kept investors on edge about global growth. The energy index
was the S&P’s biggest percentage loser as oil prices declined and financial
stocks tumbled with the S&P 500 bank index confirming it was in bear
territory. But a comeback in Apple Inc shares appeared to cheer up investors in
the broader technology sector.
Once the S&P
neared its 2018 low - reached on Feb. 8 - trading algorithms appeared to kick
in with buy signals, according to strategists. After hitting a session low late in the morning the
benchmark spent the rest of the day paring losses at an uneven pace before
turning positive. “It seems we’ve
found a temporary support at those levels. It might explain a little bit the reversal,” said
David Joy, Ameriprise Chief Market Strategist. “It tells me it’s very short term computer driven
trading, very choppy and directionless.”
British Prime Minister Theresa May added a wrinkle to global uncertainty
on Monday by delaying a
planned vote in parliament on her Brexit deal, saying it was set to be
rejected “by a significant margin”. “That
adds to the political confusion that’s weighing on the market globally,” said
Joy.
The Dow Jones Industrial
Average rose 34.31 points, or 0.14 percent, to 24,423.26, the S&P 500
gained 4.64 points, or 0.18 percent, to 2,637.72 and the Nasdaq Composite added
51.27 points, or 0.74 percent, to 7,020.52. After a sea of red in
the morning, eight of the 11 major S&P sectors closed higher. The
technology sector led the gainers with a 1.4 percent gain followed with a 0.8
percent increase in the communications sector
Energy stocks retreated 1.6 percent, the most among the 11
S&P sectors as oil prices fell. [O/R]
The second biggest
decline was a 1.4 percent drop in financials as investors worried about
the impact on slowing global growth and interest rates on banks. The
rate-sensitive bank subsector tumbled 2.3 percent. “What bank investors are doing is looking
forward at what these guys are going to do for an encore as far as earnings
growth goes,” said Sandler O’Neill analyst Jeffery Harte. “If you look at the line items, credit probably can’t get much better.
They’ve had interest rate tail winds. Loan growth seems to have slowed so the
concern is what’s going to drive the next leg up.”
Apple Inc closed up 0.7 percent at $169.60 after hitting a low
of $163.33 earlier in the day after Qualcomm Inc said it had won a preliminary
order from a Chinese court banning the import and sale of several iPhone models
in China due to patent violations. The
small-cap Russell 2000 also pulled above its session low to close 0.3 percent
lower and was 16.9 percent below its record closing high on Aug. 31.
Declining issues outnumbered advancing ones on the NYSE by a
2.17-to-1 ratio; on Nasdaq, a 1.47-to-1 ratio favored decliners. The S&P 500 posted 4 new 52-week highs
and 90 new lows; the Nasdaq Composite recorded 9 new highs and 383 new lows.
Volume on U.S. exchanges
was 8.40 billion shares,
compared to the 8.01 billion average for the last 20 trading days.
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